if this is the world I am coming back to, what's the point? First movies, then the news, now cartoons. What's next? The coyote not being able to use ACME products 'coz they are too violent? What a load.

Wiley will be known as a terrorist soon enough and the PMRC will get rid of him so kids do not see the violence and the ideas of terrorizing a bird or human. Watch out for that huge boulder above your head...I hear it falls right on you.

LULAC, the "League of United Latin American Citizens," the oldest and most respected Hispanic voters' organization, has already made its views known that it does *NOT* consider the cartoon character Speedy offensive, their spokesman remarking, "I don't know a single Mexican that doesn't like Speedy." Cartoon Network Latin America, an affiliate of Cartoon Network south of the border, regularly airs Speedy and he's one of their most popular characters. Yet Cartoon Network has made it clear that the character, banned from the air since 1999 in the US, will stay off the air in the US.

Now lemme get a little preachy here. This shows what I've always maintained: "political correctness" and "sensitivity" etc. aren't about being "sensitive" to minorities or people of color. It's a crutch for guilty liberal white people to feel good about themselves. It doesn't mean a damn thing that Mexicans themselves do like Speedy Gonzalez---some white folks at Cartoon Network have decided they shouldn't oughta like Speedy, and that's that. The important thing, you see, is for those nice white liberals at Cartoon Network to feel good about themselves, with a nice big pat on the back for themselves for being so "enlightened" and "sensitive."

NEW YORK  Speedy Gonzales easily bested Sylvester the Cat, Daffy Duck and other assorted banditos in his nearly 50-year career. But the Fastest Mouse in Mexico can't seem to escape the clutches of the Cartoon Network.

The rapid rodent has been deemed an offensive ethnic stereotype of Mexicans, and has been off the air since the cable network became the sole U.S. broadcaster of old Warner Brothers cartoons in late 1999.

But that has animated fans of the spunky character who want Speedy cartoon shorts  and the famous "Arriba! Arriba! Arriba!" cry  back on the airwaves.

Hundreds of fans have engaged in an e-mail campaign to resurrect Speedy, gathering on animation-fan Web sites to debate and organize, according to Virginia Cueto, an associate editor at HispanicOnline who wrote an article about the cartoon controversy.

"Speedy Gonzales has always been a very popular cartoon character, and cartoon fans are among the most diehard loyal fans around. They just want him back," she said in a telephone interview from Los Angeles. "And these aren't just non-Mexicans; a lot of these are Mexicans themselves."

In his adventures, the sombrero-wearing mouse sports an over-the-top Mexican accent and uses his super speed to foil foes like the "Greengo Pussygato" Sylvester. Speedy is sometimes aided by a coterie of drunken Mexican mice who lounge around the village, or by his lazy cousin Slowpoke Rodriguez, who seems as slow-witted as he is slow-footed.

"Speedy Gonzales was a great character and I understand how he portrayed Mexicans in a bad light. However, the cartoons are still funny and it's a disservice and disgrace to the original animators to never show them again," said Geoff Mukhtar, an Indianapolis publicist and Speedy fan. "These cartoons reflect the time they were created and we're trying to impose modern standards on them."

There evidently wasn't a problem with the Mexican caricatures at the beginning of Speedy's career. The 1955 animated short "Speedy Gonzales" won an Academy Award, and two other cartoons, "Tabasco Road" and "The Pied Piper of Guadalupe," were nominated for Oscars in 1957 and 1961.

But the outdated messages in cartoons like Speedy aren't appropriate in the 21st century, Cartoon Network spokeswoman Laurie Goldberg said.

"It hasn't been on the air for years because of its ethnic stereotypes," she said in a telephone interview from Atlanta. "We have such a huge library, I think we intend to go with popular shows that aren't going to upset people. We're not about pushing the boundary. We're not HBO. We have a diverse audience and we have an impressionable audience."

Networks like the Cartoon Network have edited out scenes from or simply refused to show animated movies with now-questionable gags or behavior like smoking or drinking since the 1980s. Among the most taboo of Warner Brothers cartoons are the "Censored 11," which depict blacks as fat-lipped minstrels or cannibalistic savages.

And though adult fans may bemoan the fact their favorite rodent has been sent to broadcast limbo, they ought to consider most of the viewers are children, Los Angeles psychologist Robert Butterworth said.

"These stereotypes are ingrained when we're young. And what do kids watch? Cartoons," he said. "I know the adults are saying, 'Oh God, it's just Speedy Gonzales,' but these are impressions that are put in very early and very hard to pull out. I'm the last person to hold a sign for political correctness, but kids absorb this thing on a preconscious level."

Fans aren't buying that argument.

"It seems to be yet another attempt to be PC," New York account supervisor and cartoon enthusiast Kathleen McCullough said. "Sure, adults understand and dislike the bigger ethnic issues related to such a character, but to little kids, Speedy is just a cartoon!"

And where do you draw the line with a medium that, by its nature, relies on caricature for humor, Mukhtar asked.

"What about Pepe LePew? His chasing of unwilling females surely sends the message to children that's it's OK to stalk and attack them if they resist," he wrote in an e-mail. "Plus, because he's French, does this mean that all Frenchmen are sexual predators?"

Speedy boosters shouldn't expect to see their furry hero anytime soon, at least in the United States, Goldberg said. But there is a place where Speedy can still be found zipping across TV screens  and, presumably, where the crude stereotypes he embodies don't touch a cultural nerve.

Apache Chief rules. Twenty years ago when I used to smoke dope, I would get stoned and watch Super Friends on Saturday morning before I went to work. Apache Chief was not on nearly enough. He was cool.

"political correctness" and "sensitivity" etc. aren't about being "sensitive" to minorities or people of color. It's a crutch for guilty liberal white people to feel good about themselves. It doesn't mean a damn thing that Mexicans themselves do like Speedy Gonzalez---some white folks at Cartoon Network have decided they shouldn't oughta like Speedy, and that's that. The important thing, you see, is for those nice white liberals at Cartoon Network to feel good about themselves, with a nice big pat on the back for themselves for being so "enlightened" and "sensitive

You nailed it. That is the most succint and accurate definition of PC I have ever read. Good show.

Yeah, I loved the Superfriends. Some of them were just so bad that you HAD to laugh. If you all want a laugh, go here and look at the super friends link. www.seanbaby.com is the site. Note: I do not endorse this site per se' but I think the Super Friends stuff is hilarious.

Good article nralife! You know I have been a HUGE Warner Brothers fan for my entire life and for some reason, I just stopped being able to watch it. Now that I see how much they have censored it, I can see why I haven't been able to waych it. I must have a unconscious Liberal BS detector! LOL, maybe I am a superhero!

Also, I was reading a few months ago an article in which some black community was OUTRAGED that the black man being illustrated had big lips. I said to one of my partners "What the F!#$", and he said, "Yeah, thats racist". So, I asked him what if the black folks being illustrated DO have big lips?

He said it was STILL racist to draw him that way. So, I made the conclusion that if EVERY minority HAD to be drawn to look like a white man, then THAT was racist. Pure reason just seems to escape these people.

As far as getting stoned while watching the superfriends... I was in Second Grade when I watched it so I dont think it would have been quite as cool, LOL!

If racial ambulence chasers were drill sargents and those who object to them were privates, a conversation might go something like this: Sargent: "You are a racist!! Mend your ways NOW!!" Private: "I'm not a racist. I don't intend any harm towards . . ." Sargent: " I SAID YOU ARE A RACIST!! DO YOU UNDERSTAND ME??!!IF I SAY YOU'RE A RACIST, YOU ARE A RACIST!!!" Private: "SIR, YES SIR!! Sir, I still don't think what I am doing is . . ." Sargent: "WHO GAVE YOU PERMISSION TO THINK?! I'LL TELL YOU WHAT TO THINK, WHEN TO THINK IT, AND WHEN NOT TO THINK IT ANYMORE!!"

Yep, it sure has. Disney milks it for money in other countries, but they won't sell it in the U.S. Check out Bannedfilms.com, notice the little something extra you get when you buy that poster? Act casual, say nothing! ;-)

Also, there are some of the banned Warner Bros. cartoons at THIS WEBSITE, though none of Speedy Gonzales. Might want to have a look while they're still available.

Well done I totally agree, pesonally I've grown up with these charactors and still watch these over here in England and not once have I ever felt or thought that there was any racial discrimination or that they were being deliberately or being hurtful by warner to those that come from different walks of life. Its about time these sad people took time to laugh at them selves and take it as it is intended. I find it saddening to know that these people once when they were kids them selves most likely watched these cartoons them selves and laughed all the way through them and this does make them sad today to be an adult and deprive todays generation the loss of these valid treasures made by very talented cartoonists. Keep with it America lets not loose any more vital archives through the sake of a few sad people.

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